Friday, February 21, 2014

The U.S. now employs "as many private security guards as high school teachers." That doesn't count police, members of the military, prison and court officials. Does that seem right? "The share of our labor force devoted to guard labor has risen fivefold since 1890 — a year when, in case you were wondering, the homicide rate was much higher than today." From One Nation Under Guard, New York Times Opinionator, by Samuel Bowles and Arjun Jayadev (here's a past post about guard labor and Bowles's work).

A newly found Tumblr full of laughter to tears to the point of pain: I give you Terrible Real Estate Agent Photos. The photos are bad, sure, but the genius is in the captions. Just one excerpt:

After days of waiting this agent’s patience is finally rewarded. Weak with thirst, a pair of wild mattresses appear at the watering hole.

China approved the construction of more than 100 million tons of new coal production capacity in 2013, six times more than a year earlier and equal to 10 percent of U.S. annual usage, flying in the face of plans to tackle choking air pollution (emphasis added).

So China, with more than four times as many people as the U.S., is being called out for daring to build 10 percent of what we use. Don't get me wrong, I don't want anyone to build or continue to use coal-fired power plants, but isn't this hypocritical?

An academic study from an urban planning journal (pdf): Secessionist Automobility: Racism, Anti-Urbanism, and the Politics of Automobility in Atlanta, Georgia. The writer defines secessionist automobility as "using the car as a means of physically separating oneself from spatial configurations like higher urban density, public space, or from the city altogether."A quote from the abstract: "Secessionist automobility is bound with the blunt politics of race-based secession from urban space, but also more subtle forms of spatial secession rooted in anti-urban ideologies."

I'm not the only one obsessed with letter shapes and plants. Meet Ana Bangueses, who has created an alphabet based on the design of the Bodoni typeface, but rendered in plants. This is her take on Wisteria:

Hari Kondabolu, one of the writers on W. Kamau Bell's now-defunct show Totally Biased, puts on a short bit about race in America as we head toward 2042, when white people will become a minority in the U.S.

Orange juice is not health food. It was promoted based on misinformed and unscientific thinking and now it's supported by a huge industry that's contributing to the sugar-fueled sickening of our people. Stop it right now.

While these experiments show the technique works...the team will have to solve two more problems to make it viable on a commercial scale: They need to simplify the process and find a cheaper source of silicon nanoparticles. One possible source is rice husks: They’re unfit for human food, produced by the millions of tons and 20 percent silicon dioxide by weight. According to Liu, they could be transformed into pure silicon nanoparticles relatively easily...

One more for my Florida, WTF? file: Until 2011, Florida was still placing young male offenders in a labor camp where black boys were essentially treated as slaves doing hard labor, while white boys got wood shop and vocational education. Mother Jones recently returned to the place with several retirement-age black men who spent their teen years there, often for "crimes" as minor as truancy.

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Third of four daughters, raised in a rural area outside of a small town. Now living in a moderately large city, making media and immersed in other people's media. Finally cleaning out the filing cabinet and loading its contents to the cloud.